SISTERS
… no way!
Siobhán Parkinson
Contents
Title Page
Cindy’s Diary
Aisling’s Diary
Copyright
Cindy’s Diary
Wednesday 2nd April
A happy relief, someone said. Can you believe it? A happy relief! Dad said afterwards they meant a happy release from pain and suffering, that that’s the sort of thing people say, they don’t mean it unkindly, but I don’t know. A freudian slip you call that. I don’t know why he should be so tolerant anyway. He has no right to be tolerant when people say insensitive, senseless things like that. He should be distraught. He should have been jumping down into the grave, sobbing and tearing his clothes, like Romeo, or do I mean Hamlet? That’s what you’d expect of a young widower, robbed prematurely of his bride by the evil shadow of death. But no. Maybe it was a happy relief for him.
Urbane is the only word I can think of to describe his manner at the funeral. Urbane. Actually, I just learnt that word last week – it means sort of ultra-smooth. Funny how when you learn a new word, you suddenly start to see it everywhere, and then you find uses for it, and before you know where you are, it feels as if you couldn’t have lived without it, that there would have been a gap in your way of thinking if you didn’t have it. Anyway, it’s the perfect word to describe him, standing there at the door of the church, in his best three-piece business suit and that white shirt and wine tie she gave him for Christmas, and that sick gold pocket watch just glinting on his flat belly, gravely shaking hands with people and making conversation, asking people how their children were doing at school. I ask you! I nearly had to stand on his toe at one point, when it looked as if he was going to get into a conversation about a rugby team. God’s teeth!
I drew the blinds down, so people would know it had happened at last, the house was in mourning, we were not to be disturbed. I’d have put crape on the door knocker if I could have found any, but I don’t think they make it any more. I thought about tearing up an old pair of black tights, but then I thought that might be a tad tacky. And what did he do? Went around swishing them all up again, the blinds I mean, their little silky knotted cords like dressing gown sashes swinging merrily against the window panes, saying we needed to let in some light and air, that lowering the blinds was a lot of old-fashioned nonsense, and, worst of all, that she wouldn’t have wanted it. He seems to have suddenly discovered all sorts of things she would or wouldn’t have wanted. She wouldn’t have wanted ‘The Lord is my Shepherd’, he said – too commonplace. She wouldn’t have wanted a big funeral, he said, just a simple service. A simple service! Where does he think he is? The Home Counties of England? We don’t have simple services in St Patrick’s. I’m sure Fr Egan has never used the word ‘service’ in his life, unless he’s talking about that wretched Toyota of his. We just have the standard funeral mass, with all the latest trimmings – someone from the family has to do a reading, and people have to bring up objects at the offertory that are associated with the dead person – very moving I’m sure. What would she have wanted brought up, I wondered. He couldn’t be bothered to choose. In the end I went for a copy of Ulysses, to represent her literary side, and then I was kind of stumped. Her other main interest was her house, really, but how do you represent that in a thoughtful and reverent way? You couldn’t very well carry up an antimacassar or a teatowel – not that she went in for anything as fussy as antimacassars of course. I thought of a copy of Interiors, but then it would look a bit silly beside Ulysses – sort of the sublime to the ridiculous, really. So in the end I got a little set of doll’s-house furniture from one of those specialist shops for serious collectors, not a toy shop or anything – Georgian I think it was supposed to be, though which George I don’t think it mentioned – and I glued it all down on a nice piece of carpet that was left over from the hall-stairs-and-landing, which we had done last year, and made a sort of a little drawing room out of it, very effective with an Adams-type fireplace and all, very tasteful, but I think some of the aunts thought it was childish. Well, who cares? I’m allowed to be childish. I’m only fifteen, after all, and my mother’s dead.
There, I’ve said it now. My mother is dead. It doesn’t sound so bad if you say it sort of casually. Well, actually, no, I haven’t got a mother any more. One-parent family and all that. She’s dead, as a matter of fact. My mother, I mean, you know, dead. As in no longer with us. Safe in the arms of Jesus. Passed away. Gone to her just deserts, I mean, to her reward. Gone to the other side. Gone – just gone, gone, gone, OK? Gone!
Thursday 10th April
God, I hate algebra. Geometry’s OK. I like those theorems, sort of a lovely logic to them. But algebra is perverse. (That’s my new word for this week. It doesn’t mean the same as perverted, not at all, I mean, I can be perverse myself sometimes, but I’m not …, or at least, I don’t think I am.) Anyway, if you want perverse, algebra is definitely it. I mean, people deliberately calling numbers X. Do these numbers have a private life they want to keep hidden, I ask myself, or how come they have to have their identities shielded like that? X! It’s not even original. Why couldn’t they be T or L or something, just for variety? But no, it’s always our old friends X and Y.
Sometimes, when I get really bored with algebra, I manage to stage a little diversion. You know, a bit of a fainting fit or something like that. I read in one of those old school stories of Imelda’s (she’s my aunt, dead cool, my godmother too, actually) – Mallory Towers, I think the place was called – that you put blotting paper in your shoes. I worried for a while that one of these enthusiastic first aid types might take my shoes off, and my scheme would be exposed, so I had the bright idea of putting the blotting paper in my socks instead. I tried tissues one day, but that didn’t work. Seems it has to be good old-fashioned blotting paper. So I tried that. Also I held my breath and thought about injections. That seemed to work. I can’t be sure it was the blotting paper, of course, but it probably helped.
But the thing is, now I don’t actually have to faint. I just have to get a bit pale or have pinkish eyes and maybe let a discreet little sob escape, and Mr Garvey is throwing windows open and patting me on the back at a great rate. I don’t like him patting me on the back like that. He’s a bit of a scumbag really. Short men are always trying to over-compensate, to show how sexy they are. I read that in Seventeen. Anyway, Mr Garvey – Mr Gravy we call him – is definitely in that category. He’s dead hairy. It’s kind of gross really, this short skinny little fellow with really white skin, all crawling with thick black hairs. Gives me goosepimples just thinking about him. And I definitely didn’t take to having him slapping me on the back. I wonder if I could get him for sexual harrassment? (That’s just a joke, by the way.)
Anyway, ever since I fainted two weeks in a row in algebra, and then with him seeing me sobbing my heart out in the cloakroom my first day back after the funeral, I have him where I want him. Or at least I thought I had. I thought I was in control of the situation – until yesterday.
Yesterday, when I bent my head over my book and gave a pitiful little shudder, like I was trying to suppress my grief, he came right down the centre aisle between the desks and he sat down on the seat beside me – Lisa was out sick that day, monthlies I think, though she seems to have them twice a month, it can happen, you know, especially at our age, something to do with too many hormones – anyway, he sat down beside me and he said, Cindy, I think you should go and see the guidance counsellor, and his knobbly adam’s apple sort of wobbled pathetically in his scrawny little neck.
Yeah, my name’s Cindy. Naff, isn’t it. Like I’m called after a doll or something. My mum’s idea. Apparently she wanted to spell it Cyndi
, but my dad put his foot down at that. Mum could be a real nerd, sometimes, actually. Give him his due, Dad has a certain sense of decorum. I know it’s partly because she was American, and they have what Dad calls ‘different cultural values’. He can be so condescending, you wouldn’t believe it. Reminds me of someone who hates blacks or travellers, but is trying to make it sound politically correct, though in this case it’s Americans he hates, which is politically correct anyway, practically obligatory actually.
Not me. I mean, I call travellers ‘tinkers’ just to annoy old Iron Knickers McCormack, our RE teacher. She gets on our nerves. Always wanting us to create living liturgies. I’m not entirely sure what that is, but it involves taking your shoes off. You can imagine the pong with twenty-five fifteen-year-olds prancing about in their stockinged feet while old Iron Knickers plays ‘Lord of the Dance’ on the harmonica.
Anyway, where was I? Oh yes, the guidance counsellor. I told Mr Gravy that I thought the guidance counsellor was for careers. He said yes, but also for personal stuff. I asked him did he think I had a personal problem, and he said he thought I needed bereavement counselling. You know, the funny thing was, when he said the word ‘bereavement’ I got all choked up, for real, like, this time. I mean I’d been putting it on before, just to waste a bit of algebra time, but when he came out with the word like that, it had such a lonely, abandoned sound, I felt all tearful and I really wanted to put my head on Gravy’s tweedy lapel and have a good sob. Luckily I didn’t. I have great composure when I put my mind to it.
It ended up with Gravyface saying he would talk to the guidance counsellor person on my behalf if I liked, and I said I did like, ‘cause I don’t really know Milly-Molly-Mandy. Her real name is Margaret Magee – can you imagine parents who would inflict a name like Margaret on a child whose surname is Magee – I mean, some people have no imagination, she was bound to be called Maggy-Maggy, and she was for a while, and then we added a third Maggy on for good measure, or rhythm, or something, so then she was Maggy-Maggy-Maggy. I don’t exactly know how this got transformed into Milly-Molly-Mandy. Either some wit saw the parallel, or else somebody just made a mistake one day and called her that by accident, and it stuck. (Milly-Molly-Mandy, in case you don’t know, is a character in a kids’ book, or at least, in lots of kids’ books. She is unbearably sweet and good, so you see it’s especially appropriate, or you will see after a bit.)
It’s all set up for next week. I feel it just sort of happened, but maybe it’ll be OK. At least I’ll get to leave the classroom for the counselling session. Hope it’s during algebra.
Wednesday 16th April
I don’t know what it is about Dad. He’s so, I don’t know, together. Urbane. It’s as if he was never married. He’s picked up the pieces of his life and he’s just sailing on. Or rather, he’s behaving as if there weren’t any pieces to pick up. As if nothing was even broken. As if Mum never even existed. He never mentions her.
He just gets up in the morning and makes breakfast, like he always used to while she was sick. He has it all worked out. Puts the percolator on first thing. Then he has a shower and gets dressed. He’s fast in the mornings, I’ll give him that. He has it down to ten minutes, showering and dressing. As soon as I hear the water thrumming on the bottom of the bath I know it’s time to get up, and by the time I have heaved myself out of bed he’s gone, leaving the bathroom scented and steaming. By the time I’m showered and dressed, he’s downstairs again, sipping coffee and reading The Irish Times, and my breakfast is waiting for me. Sometimes it’s prunes with yoghurt. Sounds too healthy to be tasty, but I love it. Sometimes it’s just toast and marmalade. Occasionally it’s fried mushrooms or a grilled rasher or even an omelet. But it’s never cornflakes, like it used to be when Mum was in charge. Sometimes I get this desperate longing for a plate of cornflakes with brown sugar and hot milk, but no, not with Dad around. He would just consider that too run-of-the-mill altogether. Anyone at all could have cornflakes with hot milk.
Oh I don’t know, how come I get carried away describing breakfast, when what I really want to talk about is Dad’s behaviour? It’s unnatural. He’s unnaturally calm about it all. It makes me uneasy. Either he is totally cold-hearted, or he is numbed, still in shock, or, and this seems to me on balance the most likely scenario, he never loved Mum in the first place, was maybe even thinking of leaving her, when she conveniently developed cancer and let him off the hook.
I look at him sometimes over my prunes and yoghurt – it’s a good time to look at him, breakfast, because he is always stuck into the paper at that hour – and I think to myself, this is a man who disliked his wife. This man with his trim moustache and his double-breasted jacket carefully draped over the back of a kitchen chair. This man with a gold signet ring and membership of an expensive golf-club, a secret buyer of The Great Composers – I know, I’ve seen him slipping it into the shopping trolley at the supermarket when he thinks I’m not looking, you’d think it was Playboy he’s so furtive about it – this is a merry widower, released from the burden of domestic responsibility and a clinging, houseproud, under-achieving wife.
Yes, I have to admit it. Mum was all those things. She got married young, gave up work almost as soon as she got pregnant, and never looked back. After that, once I was at school, it was all cake sales and coffee-mornings. Then she graduated to book clubs and writers’ workshops, and then it was bridge parties and meeting friends for lunch in town, even the occasional cocktail party or exhibition, and endless charity dinners. Last year she joined a wine-tasting group and took up French for about the third time. She took a course in interior design once. She was going to become a consultant, but she never sat the exam. Then she did one of those courses that teaches you how to advise people what colours they should wear. It’s all a load of mumbo-jumbo. Either a colour suits you or it doesn’t. All this talk about personality types and skin tones and seasons and everything is so much codswallop, as far as I’m concerned, but what I found really offensive about it was the way people could get totally hung up on this sort of thing, when the world is full of real issues, you know? Don’t get me wrong. I’m not one of these unbearable walking social consciences. I’m not against fashion. I love it, actually, but I think you have to have a sense of style and if you haven’t, forget it. All the skin charts in the world are about as useful as having your horoscope cast when it comes to putting a look together. If you need a system, then it isn’t a look.
I like that. If you need a system, then it isn’t a look. It might be good for an advertising campaign some time, when I get a job in Creative. I love the sound of that. I’m in the Creative department, actually. Except I’ll have to work on pronouncing ‘I’m’. You have to say it the way Sinéad O’Connor does. It has to sound like a cross between ‘Oi’m’ and ‘Aahm’, not easy.
Thursday 17th April
Well, of course it wasn’t during algebra, the counselling session, I mean. That’d be too good to be true. It was during English, which is a shame, because Mr O’Donnell who teaches that is gorgeous and we all have this massive collective crush on him and we have this competition going. Every time he asks a question we all put our hands up, and wave them like mad, whether or not we know the answer. The idea is to get him to ask you. If he does ask you, you’ve won. Doesn’t matter if you don’t know – you can just say any old thing. The point is to get him to look at you long enough and to say your name. Bliss, to hear him say your name. I could swoon! He must think we’re all terribly enthusiastic. He only has to lift his voice up at the end of a sentence and we’re all away, seizing the opportunity of a question and waving our hands like billyo. The poor man is faced with a sea of hands practically every time he looks up from Julius Caesar. I answered him once, and whatever I said, I can’t remember what it was now, it must have been a bit rude, but anyway, the poor man blushed. He doesn’t ask me any more, but I still take part in the competition, for the fun of it. It’s gas to see the way he tries not to make eye-contact with me. He kn
ows that if he did, my eyes would burn into his and he’d be forced, against his better judgement, to ask me.
But to get back to Milly-Molly-Mandy and the counselling, it was desperate. I had to sit there and listen to her giving me all this guff about my tender years – I kid you not, she actually used that putrid term – and the importance of a mother figure for a girl of my age, and how I should learn to grieve properly and all this old rubbish. I mean, I know all that stuff. You can read it in Cosmo any day. And I did cry and all. I like a good cry, actually. It’s my dad who isn’t grieving properly I told her, and she got all interested and wanted to know about my relationship with my father. Well, I just stared. Relationship! What a word! He’s just my father, I said. You’d think he was a fella, the way she was talking. Also, she has this unnerving habit when she is talking of stopping in the middle of a sentence, in the middle of a word even, and sort of sucking in a breath between her teeth and swallowing a whole lot of saliva, quite audibly. Then she lets out a long moist sort of sigh before she continues. I don’t know whether she has some sort of a plumbing problem in her mouth, or whether she just does it for effect. Effect, I think. It makes the other person very nervous, because you are left waiting for the next word in the sentence and she has to do her oral flushing bit first. Maybe she does it to make sure you are listening, hanging on her words.
Anyway, she got all serious then and started on about somebody called Electra in Ancient Greece. She fell in love with her father, apparently. I mean, give me a break. He’s not the most delightful person in the world, my dad. In fact, he is positively objectionable. But he’s not, you know, well he just isn’t. I suppose I’m lucky really. What some kids have to put up with is not funny. Still, losing your mother when you are only fifteen does not exactly make you the apple of Lady Luck’s eye, so I suppose I shouldn’t get too carried away about how great my life is.
Sisters ... No Way! Page 1